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How Marketing Can Be Better Automated With Big Data


Marketing automation is the next big thing. In mid-2013, Salesforce announced the acquisition of ExactTarget which owns Pardot, the marketing automation company whose software-as-a-service application has enabled thousands of companies to automate and manage their online marketing campaigns and boost efficiency. Before this, Adobe had acquired Neolane, another cross-channel campaign management and marketing automation provider while Oracle had acquired Eloqua and Responsys who are leaders in the cloud-based marketing automation space.



It is not hard to understand the mad rush in owning applications and services that help customers automate their marketing campaigns. Not too long ago, online marketing formed a small subset of a business’ larger marketing strategy. Today, not only is online marketing a category onto itself, it is also getting increasingly diversified through channels like PPC, social media, SEO, content marketing to name a broad few. This space is getting increasingly cluttered and without proper automation tools, it can get extremely difficult for businesses to manage and ensure consistency in the various inbound and outbound marketing messages.


Besides this, there are several other benefits to marketing automation: it can drastically improve the efficiency of the sales team and their sales cycle, it saves time and money in mundane marketing administrative tasks including generating reports and sending bulk email communications, improves the targeting and messaging without the need for additional resources and accelerates close rates through persistent follow-ups. While a lot of SaaS-based marketing automation tools have enabled such efficiency improvements in the past, the next step in this industry is to use big data and cloud computing to create a vastly improved marketing automation solution. Here are some areas that marketing automation businesses are working on.


Data Driven Messaging: Marketing automation today largely relies on the marketer setting filters to target prospects and customers through parameters like their location, time zone, purchasing frequency, etc. But marketing communication could become more timely and efficient if it was based on analyzing their buying behavior not just on the marketer’s own website, but also over other complementary channels. This does not necessarily have to be a privacy nightmare for the customer. Tools like BuiltWith already host tons of valuable information regarding the back-end technology infrastructure and business tools used by various businesses. This information from thousands of businesses may be mined using big data to derive crucial insights into potential buying patterns of your existing or prospective customers and marketing strategies may be automated around this.


Predictive Analytics: Marketing strategy today is based off data provided by goals and funnels. While they provide a reactive way to analyze the success of marketing campaigns, big data can help with building proactive marketing automation systems that can yield higher returns on your investments. For instance, big data analytics can tell you whether the navigational path taken by a prospective customer would lead to them signing up or not. Based on this, you can devise an email marketing campaign that could route your prospects through a navigational path that is better suited to bringing them ‘back on track’.


This is an exciting time to get started with marketing automation and with new big data driven strategies, marketing would not only get more efficient, but also smarter.






How Marketing Can Be Better Automated With Big Data

How to Find More & Better Content Ideas with Media Monitoring

Oh, the dreaded blank page, the taunting blink of the cursor!


As a marketer, one of your greatest challenges is to continuously come up with great content that resonates with your audience — whether you’re writing blog posts, email campaigns and newsletter copy, marketing page messages, or social media updates. When you feel like your main job is to always be producing new content, it’s easy to forget to stop and listen to the people for whom you’re creating it.


You might be wondering, “How does this help me?” Well, we’ll get there.


Getting to know and understand your audience is the best way to connect with them. What problems do do they face? What topics, questions, people, and products do they find interesting? How do their thoughts and opinions relate to your marketing and business goals?


The key to creating successful content is to be relevant and engaging — and one of the most powerful ways to do that is to be helpful and provide value. This kind of giving mentality works to build the trust and relationships you’ll need to attract, convince, convert, and retain your community and customers.



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Media monitoring gives you the ability to gain insight into how to identify that value. People-watching or keeping your ears perked up in a crowd is a well-known tactic for gaining creative writing inspiration — and media monitoring is much the same way. You get to learn about people and what makes them tick, on their terms, and then use that intelligence to get creative, reach more people, and build deeper relationships.


Here are three ways to use media monitoring to come up with successful content ideas that make an impact.


Monitor keywords for topic ideas that will help your readers succeed


Make the content unique


Get to know your audience by monitoring general keywords and then deducing specific trends of interest. Set up alerts for key terms, topics, and hashtags that are in line with your brand and industry with tools like Mention. Or do manual searches on social media channels like Twitter and tools like BuzzSumo.


By tracking broader terms like “email marketing” and “lifecycle email,” we’ve discovered that people are hungry for guidance through best practices and tips. That gives us a choice to play into that trend or differentiate ourselves from the crowd by diving deeper into topics, with more specific treatments as well as concrete, real-life examples.


For instance, we noticed a recent uptick in interest around deliverability and spam filtering, but saw most of the content provided vague tips. So we published a post walking through specific steps to keep your emails out of the spam folder.


monitoring content


Social content-sharing forums and news sites, where community members can vote on articles and posts — like GrowthHackers, Inbound, Hacker News, and Quibb — not only reveal what people find interesting, but also have a built-in distribution network. Monitor trends in relevant topics and then use that networking power.


content marketing monitoring


By using this approach to track the most popular email marketing content, we saw that people wanted templates and blueprints that they could then adapt and use. So we came up with some blog posts that provided copy templates for different types of emails. (Now depending on the month, sites like GrowthHackers and Inbound are among the top 5 largest drivers of traffic to our blog.)


Key takeaway: Use keyword and topic monitoring to identify trends and opportunities to stand out in a crowd.


Uncover specific problems by listening to what people are saying


With keyword monitoring, you get a sense of the forest of what people are interested in. But when you start paying attention to what specific people, community members, customers, and influencers are saying — not just sharing and upvoting — you get a sense of the trees, the specific questions and issues people are facing.


People pose questions in forums and social media and chances are, if a few folks have spoken up about something, there are many others wondering and working through the same issues.


Here are 3 quick ways to listen in a more targeted way:


1. Pay attention and respond to direct questions.


This is probably an obvious tactic, but just remember not to undervalue when people reach out to you. Here’s a question, unrelated to our product, from a Twitter follower, regarding a new tool from Gmail.


monitoring engagement


That sparked an internal discussion about trying the tool ourselves and seeing if we could come up with interesting insights to share.


2. Curate groups and lists of experts and influencers.


Find out what experts and practitioners are going through and listen to them talking shop. This is a great way to gain focus and efficiency in your media monitoring.


twitter list monitoring


For instance, I created a list of awesome email marketers and learn about industry-relevant news, events, issues, and informed opinions about problems and trends.


3. Tap into people’s emotions.


On social sharing and monitoring tools, you can search and filter by sentiment or whether people are expressing generally positive or negative opinions. These tools aren’t perfect, but can give you a lot of insight into when people have strong feelings about something.


Here’s a sample Twitter search of the hashtag topic #emailmarketing, in English, expressing negative sentiment:


monitoring sentiment


With this tactic, we’ve been able to learn more about how people often feel frustrated with email marketing, both on the receiving and sending end, because things don’t work the way they’re supposed to. There’s a gulf that people experience in how the care that gets put into building products and businesses often doesn’t extend to how email is treated. This inspired one of our most popular posts about how email is actually part of the user experience.


Key takeaway: Make your listening targeted and efficient by paying attention to particular audience members, experts, and strong emotions.


Talk to people, plain and simple.


Just as product managers must get out there and talk to users and customers to do their job well, so should marketers. Your product is your content and copy, and talking to your audience is the best way to get feedback and new ideas.


A great opening into a conversation with people is when they share your content. In the optimal case, say thanks and express gratitude, but don’t just stop there. Be proactive about continuing the conversation. Here’s a more content/product-focused interchange: where the reply back to a “Thanks for sharing!” message paves the way to introduce our newsletter:


twitter lead gen card


More importantly: ask questions based on their initial tweet or around the content they’ve just shared. It’s a real opportunity to learn from others, increase understanding, and prompt creative ideas.


twitter content ideas


A tip: don’t just track your Twitter handle for content shares. Remember to set up alerts for brand names without an @ symbol. According to Mention, “30.72% of tweets containing company names don’t include their Twitter handle.” And that becomes even more important when you’re looking to start a conversation with someone who has shared your content but didn’t directly include an “@“ mention.


Finally, email is one of the best ways to talk with people because it’s a more personal, one-to-one communication channel. This is easy to overlook, given common (but not best!) practices like having no-reply email addresses or treating messages as a one-way, outbound street. Whether it’s with your newsletter, feature announcements, or lifecycle emails: keep the conversation going, because this is your core audience.


Key takeaway: Use media monitoring to not just start but also develop an ongoing conversation by asking questions.


Putting this into action


  • Set up alerts in your media monitoring tool and track topics in community content-sharing forums to identify recurring themes, questions, and trends.

  • Look for specific questions and challenges posed by your followers, customers, and community members as well as influencers on social media and forums.

  • Pay attention to signals of strong emotion that will suggest ideas for strongly resonant messages.

  • Listen and keep the conversation going with your audience and community, instead of thinking of marketing as a one-way, outbound channel.

mention-academy



How to Find More & Better Content Ideas with Media Monitoring

This startup raised funding to better tell you when and where to send your newsletters


Online marketing and analytics

Image credit: Pixabay



Ever tried talking about your work to someone you just met at a big, crowded party somewhere? More often than not, you’ll have to repeat yourself two or three times, while the other person squints and leans in, trying to hear you over the noise that only a throng of 100-plus people in an enclosed space can produce. Sooner or later, your conversation buddy changes the subject or wanders away in search of more drinks.


Now multiply the noise several thousand times, and that’s you trying to talk about your work to the internet. Only the people you’re trying to reach are already constantly bombarded with unrelenting volleys of information. So how do you get through?


Singapore-based Ematic thinks it has a solution for your voice to rise above the din. The three-year-old startup provides applications and insights on email marketing, specializing in ecommerce. Its products are aimed at marketers who want to increase their company’s visibility and attract more customers, by streamlining their marketing methods.


Channeling the message


Paul Tenney, Ematic founder and CEO

Paul Tenney, Ematic founder and CEO



“The way I look at marketing technology, it’s between campaign and channel,” Paul Tenney, founder and CEO of Ematic, tells Tech in Asia, talking about the methods available to marketers for reaching their intended customers. “There are tools that are great for campaigns and tools that are great for managing channels, and there have been attempts to do both with the same product. I don’t think that works very well.”


Paul founded Ematic in 2012, after coming to Singapore as the Asia-Pacific person for Silicon Valley email marketing firm Yesmail. The Stanford graduate had previously been a director for the company’s California-based business, working with clients like Hewlett-Packard, Macy’s, and eBay.


Once in Asia, Paul noticed that existing digital marketing solutions for local companies couldn’t work the same way as in the US; they were expensive and complicated, and took too long to implement. Paul wanted to start his own company to provide a better way to Asian businesses. Being in this space since 2004, he had considerable experience to bring to the table, as well as the help and expertise of a lot of his former colleagues. And so Ematic was born.


Hello, see you again soon


Ematic’s solution is a set of software tools that can plug into a company’s chosen campaign management method or its website. For example, a company may be using Mailchimp for its marketing needs. Ematic’s tools connect to it and provide recommendations and actions based on machine learning and artificial intelligence.


There are currently two apps made by Ematic that tackle different sides of its mission.


HiIQ is a tool that suggests when is best to say hi, and to whom. The system works with the user’s database to determine when to fire off emails and to which addresses, targeting (hopefully) the right people with the right message. This results in less time and energy wasted by the marketer, and less noise for the people the message is trying to reach.


ByeIQ is a piece of software that determines what messages and calls to action to display to a user about to leave your website, and when. The idea is to get the user to either subscribe to the website’s mailing list or to become a customer and make a purchase. Paul says this is done in a way that’s seamless and does not interrupt the user’s experience.


Ematic Solutions dashboard

Image credit: Ematic Solutions



“We basically boil down email marketing to a three-metric approach,” Paul explains. “How many new subscribers you can add to your database, how much engagement you are able to drive, and how many conversions you are able to drive.”


Raising money


Ematic announced today it has raised S$1.5 million (US$1.07 million) in a seed round led by venture capital firm Wavemaker Partners. 500 Startups and Convergence Ventures also joined in. The startup says it’s continuing to seek additional investment in this round.


Most of the funding will be put toward product development, Paul explains. The rest will be used for “strategic growth” within Southeast Asia. Other markets will follow later through subsequent funding rounds, as Ematic aims for more territories around the world.


Paul is pretty happy with these particular investors. Wavemaker has the desired expertise on how to help a business-to-business-focused company like Ematic, he explains. As for 500 Startups and Convergence, he finds there is a strong culture fit with the startup, while the latter offers a valuable local contact when it comes to partnerships within Indonesia.


The startup won’t disclose numbers, but Paul says it is ahead of its targets in terms of revenue at the moment. It has cleared the 50-customer mark throughout Southeast Asia, including Singapore, Thailand, and Indonesia, boasting clients like cosmetics ecommerce website Luxola.




Editing by J.T. Quigley and Terence Lee




This startup raised funding to better tell you when and where to send your newsletters

Facebook Brings Autoplay, Better Targeting To Its Mobile Ad Network, Grows Its Marketing Foothold




A carousel ad, one of several new advertising features Facebook recently introduced to its mobile ad network. (Courtesy of Facebook)

A carousel ad, one of several new advertising features Facebook recently introduced to its mobile ad network. (Courtesy of Facebook)



The auto-play video ads that users see when they check their news feed have been a big money-maker for Facebook. Now, the social network is bringing auto-play advertisements and several new features to apps in its mobile ad network, giving Facebook more ways to expand its influence in the digital advertising market.


The auto-play ads and new features will be available to publishers and developers on the “Audience Network” on Apple’s iOS and Android, the company said in a post on Tuesday. The move gives Facebook the chance to sell more video ads to marketers without upsetting Facebook users by putting more ads on its own apps.


“The Audience Network has been allowing third-party apps to monetize users for a while, and now these apps will see a greater return with a more diverse set of ad units to show,” Jan Rezab, CEO of social media analytics firm Socialbakers said in an email. “Introducing auto-play video here is a smart move for Facebook. It’s been performing well for marketers on the Facebook platform, and it’s a format that’s becoming very familiar to users.”


Facebook’s mobile ad business makes up a growing portion of its overall revenue. In the three months ending on June 30, mobile accounted for 76% of advertising revenue, up from 62% a year earlier. Digital video advertising revenue in the U.S. is expected to rise 34% to $7.77 billion this year, according to forecasting firm eMarketer.


In addition to autoplay ads, Facebook is making other new formats available to apps on the network who support full-screen ads. These apps can now be included in marketing campaigns that show product ads, known as “dynamic product ads,” to users based on items users have browsed on the web. Other new formats include carousel ads, which display a series of images, as well as a click-to-play video ad tool.


“The new features Facebook is rolling out for dynamic product ads mean ads will be more deeply targeted and relevant to the users they’re shown to,” said Rezab. “Facebook is trying to allow marketers to prioritize customers who will make a purchase.”


Facebook created its mobile ad network last year. Native ads now make up more than 80% of impressions on the network.


The social network has been scaling up video ads on Instagram and recently launched spherical and embedded videos. Facebook says it generates 4 billion video views per day, but has come under pressure for promoting this metric. Facebook counts a video view as three seconds, including views of auto-play videos, while its competitor Google-owned YouTube usually counts a view at around 30 seconds.


Video creators have criticized Facebook’s video view metric, saying that many of the videos Facebook counts in its tally were lifted from their original source and uploaded through Facebook’s native player, rewarding the Facebook page for the view and failing to reimburse the content creator. Video creators have also said that three seconds is not long enough to claim that a viewer was meaningfully engaged with a video, especially when YouTube tends to count views much later. In a blog post, YouTube star Hank Green noted a report from the ad agency Ogilvy and Tubular Labs that found that more than 70% of Facebook’s highest performing videos came from other sources, such as YouTube.


Facebook has responded to many of these criticisms, saying it has a system to help prevent unauthorized videos from being uploaded to its site, as well as tools to allow content owners to report potential copyright infringement. The social network said it removes unauthorized content when it receives a valid notice and suspends accounts of people with repeated violations. Facebook also said it is exploring news ways to help protect content owners. Green noted in his post, however, that because it isn’t possible to search for videos on Facebook, it is difficult for creators to track when their content is being freebooted. He also said that the fact that Facebook’s algorithm favors videos uploaded natively leads to more copyright violations.


In June, Facebook gave advertisers the option to choose to pay for a view once a video has played for 10 seconds. The company previously required advertisers to pay the instant a video ad, auto-play or not, came into view.


By comparison, YouTube has long offered marketers a product called TrueView under which they get charged only if a viewer doesn’t skip an ad—an option users have usually after four or five seconds—or if the viewer watches at least 30 seconds of the ad. Twitter charges advertisers for video views of three seconds or longer, but only when the video is completely visible in the user’s screen. Last year, Facebook’s share of the worldwide mobile advertising market was 17.4%, while Google’s share was 38.2% and Twitter’s was 2.5%, eMarketer said.


Follow me on Twitter @kchaykowski and e-mail me at kchaykowski@forbes.com.





Facebook Brings Autoplay, Better Targeting To Its Mobile Ad Network, Grows Its Marketing Foothold

3 steps to better customer personalization

The fact that personalization is a hot buzzword among email marketers today should come as no surprise. Consumers appreciate when companies deliver relevant messaging directly to their inbox. Personalized emails allow marketers to create highly tailored messaging at the individual customer level, making customers feel appreciated and loved. Even more importantly, personalization helps drive customers to take a next step. This level of intimacy goes well beyond simply including the customer’s first name in the greeting. Using data, marketers can create one-to-one messages that reflect the customer’s preferences and drive ROI.


If you aren’t sending personalized emails, then you need to start. Radicati estimates that 196.4 billion will be sent this year. The only way to get noticed in the increasingly hectic inbox is to send messages that resonate directly with the customer. Establishing a personalization stream in your email marketing program should not feel overwhelming. Create a plan to build personalization for your brand in phases, which will be dependent upon the maturity level of your current email program.


Phase 1: Basic personalization


To launch a personalized email marketing program, we encourage you to simply start with the basics. Basic personalization involves creating messages that are targeted based on information that your customer provided to you upon registration. This could include information such as gender, location, or birthday. Using this contextual data can help create a personal experience in email.


For instance, if your customer is based in New York and you know that a snowstorm is about to hit the area, then you can build a campaign around the information that you know. Retail companies can use this opportunity to push their snow gear, while a travel marketer might capitalize on the need for some sun to escape the cold winter. A ski resort, on the other hand, might promote its fresh show and nearby location. A restaurant may email a coupon to people wanting to order dinner in. Depending on your business and what you sell, you can take advantage of real life current events to personalize emails.


Phase 2: The preference center


The next phase of personalization in email is the intermediate level. In this phase, you should be looking at deeper demographic information that you have collected about your customer, which is usually accomplished via a preference center. Customers that have filled out a preference center have raised their hand to identify the types of emails that they want to receive. Customers share these details to express interest, and it is your job to ensure that your email content matches their preferences. Do they like all of your emails or just a certain type? A retail customer may only be interested in hearing about a store’s shoes as opposed to all of its products. A publisher’s customer might only want email updates about weather and don’t want their inbox cluttered with anything on sports, entertainment, or breaking news. Tailor each customer’s email to his or her individual preferences to build a lasting relationship with your customer.


Phase 3: Customer behavior


The third phase of personalization in email is to target emails based on a customer’s behavior. Site browsing, past purchases, and loyalty activity can tell a marketer a lot about the customer, and it’s your job to make this data actionable. Look at how customers are responding to your emails, how they are browsing your site, how they are interacting with their shopping carts, and what they have previously purchased to personalize future mailings. Adapting these data points into your email program is the key to creating a highly tailored and personalized email experience.


Personalization is no longer a nice-to-have aspect of email marketing — it is a must-have. Implementing a personalization program is not as hard as you think. Consumers are constantly telling you things about themselves, you just have to figure out how to implement that data and make it actionable to create targeted, personalized messages. Personalization shouldn’t just be a buzzword; it should be a best practice of every savvy email marketer.


Tony D’Anna is CEO at PostUp


On Twitter? Follow iMedia at @iMediaTweet.



3 steps to better customer personalization

The Mythical Affiliate Manager: Why An Agency Is A Better Fit For An Online Merchant

mythical_horse.jpg


When a brand decides it wants to properly attack its marketing, it seeks out experts to help them do so. Sure, they may have a marketing manager in-house to oversee the marketing process but when they need heavy lifting in the form of an integrated advertising strategy that plays out across multiple media in multiple markets, they turn to an advertising agency.


It’s no different when a brand decides to enter the affiliate marketing channel.
Many merchants entering the affiliate channel believe a workable solution is to delegate all affiliate marketing responsibilities to an in-house affiliate manager and/or hook up with an affiliate network’s managed services offering. But an affiliate manager is just one person and an affiliate network is just a platform, a technology provider and not a marketing expert. Much in the same way Google Search is a platform for search engine marketing and does not offer search marketing expertise.


Neither solution is the best solution for a merchant who truly wants to maximize returns through the affiliate channel. Let’s take a look at several reasons why a merchant should consider an affiliate marketing agency for its affiliate marketing program.


Turnover – An affiliate marketing agency is stable in the sense that it is a corporation that consists of many people who work as a team to accomplish effective affiliate channel management for merchants. Yes, people come and people go but the team stays in place. While a great affiliate manager aims to do the same great things as an agency, they are just one person, not a team. And when they leave, and they will, the merchant, effectively, has to go back to square one.


On average, affiliate managers — like any one in any marketing professions — last about 14 months before they move on to their next gig. And when they do, most of the processes, procedures, practices and amassed knowledge disappear with the exiting affiliate manager.


Continuity — Akin to the aforementioned turnover, continuity, as it relates to merchant revenue, can be lost. When an affiliate manager leaves a merchant, it’s a dramatic revenue disruption. Processes, procedures, practices and knowledge leave when the affiliate manager leaves and a new affiliate manager must get up to speed of be trained.
While that is happening, the merchant’s affiliate program is not running at 100% and that can lead to a disruption in revenue. Existing relationships with affiliate networks that have been built up over time with the in-house affiliate manager walk out the door along with the exiting affiliate manager and the merchant has to build those relationships all over again.


Expertise — With an affiliate manager, you get a warm body in a chair who is lucky if they can keep up with anything more than the very mechanical aspects of managing a merchant’s affiliate channel. This is not meant as a disrespectful jab, simply an observation that an affiliate manager is one person, not a team. An agency gives you a team of experts who are adept at optimizing campaigns, customizing creative, building and maintaining relationships with affiliates and networks.


Clout — If an affiliate can have a phone call with an agency and bang out a program with 200 retailers at the same time versus have a phone call with one affiliate manager at one retailer, who do you think that affiliate is most likely to answer the call from. This is a serious stumbling block with the in-house affiliate manager model.


Agencies have clout. Just like any large entity in any segment of marketing or the broader business world, they can get stuff done because they have a much bigger reach and a larger command of the affiliate channel. An in-house affiliate manager simply lacks the bandwidth to do everything necessary to run a full blown affiliate program.


Cost Effectiveness — When a merchant hires an individual affiliate manager, they are taking a risk in that they don’t always know what they are getting. When an agency is hired, it’s a simple fee. With an in-house employee, there’s benefits, vacation, sick days, bonuses, training costs and other unforeseen costs.


In addition, agencies are on 24/7. Certainly an individual affiliate manager can work their ass off but, again, they are just one person, not a team like an agency.


And then there’s cost-related risks. Is the affiliate manager exceptional? Are they just OK? Or are they terrible and will need to be replaced in 6 months? With an agency the proof is in the portfolio and tenure of clients. Sure, an agency can suck too but there are more solid metrics on which to judge that agency.


Experience — A single affiliate manager has a limited set of experience. That just comes with being a single person. An agency brings to the table a stable of experience, an overlapping army of expertise spanning many years working with many different merchants, networks and affiliates. Yes, people can come and go from an agency just like affiliate managers come and go from merchants but an agency team can retain the collective knowledge much more effectively than an individual person. With an agency, a merchant gets continuity of experience.


What about Network Managed Services? — Yes, networks can bring scale to a merchant’s affiliate program but there are limitations. Chiefly, the merchant only has access to the affiliates in its network. That’s limiting if the merchant wants to explore all options.


And then there’s the question of strategy. If a network offers strategic advice to a merchant, it’s questionable at best. Why? Because any advice that network gives is going to involve pointing the merchants money right back at the network whether or not the network’s solution is best for the merchant. The network has no motivation to seek out and discover options outside its network that might be a better strategic direction for the merchant.


As a merchant, you want the best possible return for the affiliate channel. To get the best possible return, a merchant has to be able to get an unbiased, 50,000 foot view of the affiliate channel and, in addition, reliable, consistent expertise that will never walk out the door and sap affiliate channel revenue.


This guest article was written by Greg Shepard, CEO of affiliate agency AffiliateTraction.



The Mythical Affiliate Manager: Why An Agency Is A Better Fit For An Online Merchant

8 ways you can better integrate social into your marketing mix

Social media keyboard


As anyone who’s spent some time on the conference circuit will tell, social media is (somehow) still being treated as an exciting new trend, even though its obvious to anyone with hands-on experience social media is something that needs to be integrated into your digital marketing efforts rather than being allowed to exist within its own silo.


In fact, it seems pretty likely that the term “social media marketing” will disappear in the not-too-distant future and people will once again refer only to “marketing” as a whole. Measuring the true return of social media can be quite daunting, but integrating social media with your other marketing campaigns is the easiest method if you want to measure the ROI of your campaigns.
Here’s a couple of tips on how you can use social media with your current marketing and business strategies.


1. Content marketing


Use Twitter with your traditional content marketing strategies. This includes your website and blog as well. Share your content on your favourite social media channels. If the content is interesting, the content can be shared and seen by more people. This is a great method to make sure your content is seen by more people and also the search engines.


2. Customer service


Servicing clients on the social web is a great way on establishing your business as a social business and build your community online. Let your current customers know that you have a service desk on the social web.


3. Brochures


On any business brochures you might have, add information to your social media profiles on the brochure so that interested people can connect with you.


4. Invitations


Invite people to connect with you on the social web to receive more information, coupons, discounts, access to additional services, etc. See how you can make a campaign out of this.


5. Recruitment


Social media is a great way you can use for recruitment purposes. Let users apply via social media or you can scan the applicants online by looking at their social media profiles. This can help you find the right person suitable for the right position. Do you really want to hire someone who’s only posting nude drunk photos online?


6. Trade shows


If you are running any trade shows, create a specific #hashtag relevant to the trade show to connect personally with attendees and to market the trade show.


7. Lead generation


Do some research online to find information on new clients and to find out who the key decision makers are. Connect with them via social media and start engaging with them. This is a great way to connect with industry leaders that can help you with lead generation.


8. Stay in contact with your customers


Social media is a great way you can stay connected with your customers. Use this to your advantage by connecting with your customers on their favourite social media channel to keep the relationship going.


Social media should never be seen as a standalone strategy because it should be an integral part of your business. At the end of the day it really comes down to how you are integrating social media within your business.



8 ways you can better integrate social into your marketing mix